Script core/scripts/backup-system.sh use tldp server backup and restore as a reference.
#!/bin/sh echo -n "root directory you want backup (/mnt/): " read ROOT_DIR echo -n "where you want to save (/home/user): " read DEST_DIR echo -n "backup name (system_name): " read BCK_NAME echo $DES_DIR echo $ROOT_DIR tar --xattrs -zcpf $DEST_DIR/$BCK_NAME-`date '+%Y-%j-%H-%M-%S'`.tar.gz \ --directory=$ROOT_DIR \ --exclude=usr/ports \ --exclude=usr/src \ --exclude=var/run \ --exclude=var/lock \ --exclude=srv \ --exclude=mnt \ --exclude=home \ --exclude=dev \ --exclude=run \ --exclude=tmp \ --exclude=proc \ --exclude=sys .
List files inside tar;
$tar -tvf backup.tar.gz
To restore is better to use first t flag and then x, this prevents any --absolute-paths problem;
$ tar -ztvpf full-backup-11-November-2045.tar.gz > file.lst
If you want to extrat to different directory;
$ tar xf full-backup-11-November-2045.tar.gz --directory=/mnt
If path is fine, extract everything;
$ tar --xattrs -xpvf full-backup-11-November-2045.tar.gz
Extract just one file;
$ tar --extract --file=core.tar.gz libidn#1.32-1.pkg.tar.gz
Only uncompressed tar can append files without having to extract and compress again.
First create a tar with all files in the current directory;
$ tar cpf core.tar *.tar.gz
List files before appending new file and after;
$ tar -tvf core.tar $ tar --append --file=core.tar libidn#1.32-1.pkg.tar.gz $ tar -tvf core.tar
$ tar -tvf core.tar $ tar --delete --file=core.tar libidn#1.32-1.pkg.tar.gz $ tar -tvf core.tarTools Index
This is part of the c9-doc Manual. Copyright (C) 2016 c9 team. See the file Gnu Free Documentation License for copying conditions.